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February 6, 2006
THE FINANCIAL TIMES’ ENVIRONMENT EDITOR RESPONDSOn January 31, we published a Media Alert, ‘Welcome to Mars (Or North Korea!)’. The following day, we sent the alert to Fiona Harvey, environment editor of the Financial Times:
Harvey responded the same day:
Harvey wrote again on the same day:
We replied:
We then replied to Harvey on February 2:
Harvey then replied again:
We appreciate such a prompt and thoughtful reply. We also sympathise with Harvey’s evident irritation - nobody enjoys receiving criticism. Harvey is a skilled and sincere journalist, but she occupies an important and privileged position in society - she has real influence on public opinion. It is unreasonable to expect to be able to exert such influence without being held to account, without being subject to reasoned challenge. In fact our article did not imply that we had not read Harvey’s articles and “judged them on some arbitrary keywords”. The keywords were intended merely to indicate the standard pattern of omissions and emphases in her articles found in almost all media reporting on these issues. The pattern becomes instantly clear to anyone who reads Harvey’s material and is reflected even in her reply to us. She comments tellingly, and predictably:
In other words, Harvey is justifying her performance on the basis that she is a “professional journalist” - it is her job to be “fair, balanced, neutral, impartial and objective“. But it turns out there is a bias in this balance. In reality, “professional” journalists are deemed “impartial” and “neutral” so long as they uncritically echo or endorse the views of the powerful. Journalists who subject power to serious criticism are censured for being “unbalanced“, “biased” and “unprofessional“. It is so normal for journalists to view the world from the perspective of power that, almost comically, no one notices. A February 1 BBC Radio Five live phone-in discussion on Iraq, advertised the topic for the programme thus:
What could be more neutral and balanced than to assert the government version of events as obvious fact - that the US-UK cause in Iraq truly is “democracy“? Imagine if the same programme had suggested:
This would have drawn intense flak for being unbalanced and unfair. It was to draw attention to exactly this fundamental bias in media reporting that we wrote our Media Alert. Consider, for example, that in December 2004, Harvey reported that warnings on the consequences of climate change “have prompted Tony Blair, the prime minister, to make tackling climate change a priority for world leaders in the coming year”. (Harvey, ‘The Arctic ice sheet is melting,’ Financial Times, December 31, 2004) Is climate charge any more a priority for Blair than democracy is a priority for Bush and Blair in Iraq? Of course that is the official view. Our point is that it is Harvey’s job to report the official view, to take the official view seriously, and to frame discussions within boundaries set by the official view. Notice, for example, that Harvey did not “balance” her/Blair’s claim with the view of environmentalists who would happily denounce it as “spin”, “propaganda” and “greenwash” (the words Harvey rejects as horribly biased). Well why not? Why is Blair’s view on the issue admissible in “professional” reporting, while the views of radical environmentalists are not? Again, answers are found in the power relations that compromise media performance in society. “Professional” journalists are permitted to discuss political and economic issues within bounds that do not challenge the fundamental political and economic architecture of society - the status quo must be presented as fundamentally legitimate and acceptable. There is no “professional” reason why Harvey could not publish balancing radical environmental views alongside Blair’s comments in the Financial Times - it is just that she would last about a week in her job if she did. Might makes right, but it does not make “professional” journalism balanced. Remarkably, in her December 31, 2004 article, Harvey felt able to say of climate change:
Again, this strongly echoed the views of powerful interests - many of them fanatically opposed to action threatening short-term profits. In reality there is an overwhelming scientific consensus that climate change is real, human induced and destructive - to emphasise an alleged division is in no way neutral or impartial. In a July 2005 article Harvey reported big business initiatives on climate change:
But Harvey made no mention of the many well-informed, rational and credible views of groups who describe these “environmental initiatives” as a wretched sham. The recent history of environmentalism - not least as described in the internal records of the companies themselves - simply demands that this challenge be expressed. Andy Rowell, an environment journalist and author of Green Backlash, comments:
Moreover, it is outrageous to discuss big business initiatives on the environment without mentioning the staggering history of corporate deception and mendacity on this issue. Harvey states:
Again, it is wrong to point the finger at “sceptics” without at the same time indicating the submerged iceberg of big business opposition out of which these sceptical ’tips’ emerge. Honest appraisal must include mention of the vast big business propaganda campaigns over the last several decades to demolish environmental groups, to pacify public concern, to forestall action on climate change, to deceive the public that the world is under new “green” management. We found no serious attempts to explore these issues in Harvey’s reporting. Instead Harvey comments: “a subtle change has taken place to bring business and the 'greens' closer together than ever: safeguarding the environment now requires using the tools of business". (Harvey, 'Market rides to rescue of environment World leaders are being asked today to extend emissions pricing,' Financial Times, July 6, 2005) Harvey considers this a neutral and balanced view. Many knowledgeable scientists and environmental campaigners consider it one of the great deceptions of our time. Harvey, like almost all journalists, often takes the benevolent words of political and industry leaders at face value, as hopeful signs of sane people coming to sane conclusions. But as Canadian lawyer Joel Bakan points out the corporate system is fundamentally psychopathic in motivation - it is legally obliged to subordinate people and planet to profit. Alas, ‘psychopath’ is another keyword Harvey has not used in her environmental reporting - perhaps that is the job of legal journalists. Even if we take Harvey’s arguments at face value, they make little sense. Her equivalent at the Guardian - environment editor John Vidal, no radical - +has+ mentioned the terms ‘contraction and convergence’, ‘spin’, ‘advertising’, ‘propaganda’ and ‘social justice’. On occasion, for example, he has mentioned these in the context of quotes from environmental activists - why would that be deemed unreasonable or unprofessional? Also we note that Harvey has been happy to use a term like “corporate responsibility” - is this not also jargon? Andy Rowell comments:
And why does the FT environment editor make numerous mentions of the term “marketing”, if “advertising” is somebody else‘s business on the paper? And why +not+ mention the role of corporate advertising in promoting climate killing consumption when it is quite obviously a huge part of the problem? Which parts of the problem are irrelevant to an environment journalist, and why? Harvey concludes by observing that our “long diatribe on the failings of the British press on climate change you completely overlook the newspapers that almost always ignore climate change, and take a hostile attitude towards attempts to combat it“. This is the classic complaint of the media ingénue. There is only one response - look at the shape the planet is in! How can even the most complacent journalist seriously argue that even the best media are doing an adequate job in reporting climate change? We are, are we not, on the very brink of global environmental catastrophe? Not only is nothing being done, but plenty is being done to make the problem infinitely worse - not least by the fossil fuel-funded corporate media themselves pushing flights, cars and consumption. But for someone working for the Financial Times - a newspaper that is the beating media heart of the corporate system wrecking our planet - to claim her newspaper is something other than “hostile” to serious attempts to combat climate chaos beggars belief. SUGGESTED ACTIONThe goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect for others. In writing letters to journalists, we strongly urge readers to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone. Write to Fiona Harvey, environment editor of the Financial Times: Write to Lionel Barber, editor of the Financial Times: Please also send copies of all emails to Media Lens: This is a free service but please consider donating to Media Lens: http://www.medialens.org/donate.html |
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